JOURNAL ARTICLE
REVIEW
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Cystic kidney disease: a primer.

Renal cystic diseases encompass a broad group of disorders with variable phenotypic expression. Cystic disorders can present during infancy, childhood, or adulthood. Often, but not always, they can be distinguished by the clinical features including age at presentation, renal imaging characteristics, including cyst distribution, and the presence/distribution of extrarenal manifestations. It is important to take the clinical context into consideration when assessing renal cystic disease in children and adults. For example, solitary kidney cysts may be completely benign when they develop during adulthood but may represent early polycystic kidney disease when observed during childhood. In this review, we have categorized renal cystic disease according to inherited single-gene disorders, for example, autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease; syndromic disorders associated with kidney cysts, for example, tuberous sclerosis complex; and nongenetic forms of renal cystic disease, for example, simple kidney cysts. We present an overview of the clinical characteristics, genetics (when appropriate), and molecular pathogenesis and the diagnostic evaluation and management of each renal cystic disease. We also provide an algorithm that distinguishes kidney cysts based on their clinical features and may serve as a helpful diagnostic tool for practitioners. A review of Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Disease was excluded as this disorder was reviewed in this journal in March 2010, volume 17, issue 2.

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